How to Fix Amazon Error Code 8541 (Matching Conflict Guide)
You just finished preparing a new product launch, but instead of a live listing, Amazon hits you with a “Single Match Error.” Your inventory is stranded, your launch date is slipping, and the Seller Central interface is stubbornly refusing to accept your product data.
Amazon Error Code 8541 is a matching conflict that occurs when your submitted product data contradicts the existing catalog data for your UPC or ASIN. To fix it, either match the catalog’s exact values, use a flat file update, or contact Seller Support.
Quick Reference Table

Related: Revvel Standards Marketplace Relisting Pipeline Setup Guide · Shopify C2PA Metadata for AI Product Images: 2026 Policy Guide · Optimizing Listings for Etsy AI Slop Filter: 2026 Policy Guide
Use the following table to identify the specific attributes causing your 8541 error and the immediate steps required to resolve the conflict.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Error Name | Single Match Error / Matching Conflict |
| Common Triggers | Conflict in Brand Name, Title, Color, or Product Type |
| Primary Fix | Update your submission to match Amazon’s catalog data |
| Secondary Fix | Perform a PartialUpdate via Inventory File (Flat File) |
| Advanced Fix | 24-hour “Delete and Relist” workflow |
| Verification Tool | GS1 GEPIR Database |
| Image Requirement | Pure white background (RGB 255, 255, 255) |
Detailed Requirements

Stop viewing Amazon as a simple list of products; it is a unified, global catalog. Amazon requires strict alignment between your submitted SKU data and the existing ASIN catalog data to prevent duplicate listings. When you submit a product ID (UPC, EAN, or ISBN), Amazon’s system scans its database. If that ID is already linked to an ASIN, but your data (like the Brand or Manufacturer) differs from what is already on file, the system triggers Error 8541 to protect the integrity of the catalog.
Understanding the Amazon Catalog Hierarchy
Amazon prioritizes data from certain contributors over others. If a brand owner has registered their brand through Amazon Brand Registry, their data takes “winning contributor” status. If you are a third-party seller trying to list that same product with a slightly different title or color name, Amazon will reject your input.
The error message usually provides two values:
- Your Value: The data you just tried to upload.
- Amazon’s Value: The data currently stored in the Amazon catalog.
To clear the error, you must generally yield to “Amazon’s Value” unless that data is factually incorrect (e.g., a hijacked listing).
GS1 UPC Requirements
Amazon cross-references all submitted UPCs against the GS1 database. If you use a UPC purchased from a third-party reseller rather than directly from GS1, you are significantly more likely to encounter 8541 errors. Amazon’s policy states that GTINs must be verifiable in the GS1 database. If the “Manufacturer” name on the GS1 certificate does not match the “Brand Name” or “Manufacturer” in your Amazon listing, the system may flag a conflict or prevent the listing from appearing altogether.
Before listing, verify your codes on the GS1 US website to ensure the company prefix matches your brand entity.
Common Rejection Reasons

💡 Skip the manual editing. PixelMatch batch-generates ecommerce-ready product images in 60 seconds — white background, lifestyle scenes, and variant mockups from a single source photo. Try PixelMatch free →
Identify the specific discrepancy in your “Fix Your Products” view within Seller Central. Most 8541 errors fall into one of three categories: brand name typos, identity-shifting title changes, or recycled identifiers.
Brand Name Discrepancies
This is the most frequent cause of Error 8541. If the catalog has the brand as “PixelMatch” and you submit “Pixel Match” (with a space), the system views this as a conflict. Amazon is case-sensitive and character-sensitive regarding brand strings. Even if you are the brand owner, if you haven’t synchronized your Brand Registry name exactly with your listing data, the submission will fail.
Invalid or Recycled UPCs
If you are using a recycled UPC—often found when buying “cheap” codes from unofficial resellers—that code might have been used for a completely different product category years ago. If you try to list a pair of headphones using a UPC that Amazon’s history associates with a kitchen spatula, you will receive a matching conflict error because the “Product Type” and “Brand” won’t align with the legacy data.
Color and Size Variation Conflicts
When adding a new variation to an existing parent ASIN, the “Color” or “Size” attribute must follow the existing convention. If the parent listing uses “Navy Blue” and you attempt to add a child variation called “Marine,” Amazon may trigger Error 8541. For multi-platform sellers, this is a common headache when syncing inventory from Shopify to Amazon, as Shopify allows more creative naming conventions than the Amazon Standard Identification Number (ASIN) system.
How to Fix Each Issue

Follow these methods in order. Start with the simplest manual fix before moving to the technical flat file or the time-consuming support ticket.
Method 1: Fixing via Seller Central Manage Inventory
Correct the error manually by accepting Amazon’s suggested values. This is the fastest way to get a listing live if the catalog data is acceptable to you.
- Go to Inventory > Manage All Inventory.
- Click on the “Failed” or “Drafts” tab (or look for the “Fix Your Products” link).
- Find the SKU with Error 8541.
- Click Edit.
- Locate the field highlighted in red. Amazon will usually show the “Original Value” and “Suggested Value.”
- Change your data to match the “Suggested Value” exactly.
- Click Save and Finish.
Method 2: Using a Flat File (Partial Update)
If the manual edit fails or if you have dozens of variations to fix, use an Inventory File. This “forces” the system to look at your data again.
- Download the Category-Specific Inventory File for your product.
- Fill in the required fields: SKU, Product ID (UPC/EAN), Product ID Type, and the attributes you want to change.
- In the Update/Delete column, select
PartialUpdate. This tells Amazon to only change the fields you have filled in, leaving the rest of the existing listing intact. - Upload the file via Inventory > Add Products via Upload.
- Monitor the “Upload Status” for any remaining errors.
Method 3: The Delete and Relist Workaround
When the system “locks” an attribute, a simple edit won’t work. You must perform a 24-hour reset. This is a documented community fix for stubborn 8541 errors.
- Record your SKU and UPC: Copy these exactly; you will need them later.
- Delete the SKU: Select the product in Manage Inventory and choose “Delete product and listing.”
- Wait 24 Hours: This allows Amazon’s internal database to “purge” the link between your SKU and the ASIN.
- Re-add the Product: After 24 hours, click “Add a Product” and use the same SKU and same UPC.
- Input Correct Data: This time, ensure all attributes match the catalog or your Brand Registry data perfectly.
Method 4: Opening a Case with Seller Support
If the Amazon catalog data is objectively wrong (e.g., the title is misspelled or the brand has been “hijacked” by another seller), you cannot fix it yourself. You must escalate.
- Collect evidence: Take a photo of the product in your hand showing the UPC/GTIN and the brand name clearly.
- Go to Help > Get Support > Selling on Amazon.
- Select Product, Listings, or Inventory > Fix a Product Page.
- Provide the ASIN and explain that the current catalog data is incorrect.
- Attach your GS1 certificate and real-world product photos.
Once your listing is fixed and active, your next challenge is maintaining “Amazon-ready” visual standards. Amazon requires a minimum of 1000 pixels on the longest side to enable the zoom function, though they recommend 1600 pixels for optimal customer experience. For sellers managing hundreds of variations, manually editing backgrounds is a bottleneck. Tools like Photoroom offer a Pro tier at $12.99/mo for basic background removal, while Adobe Express provides a free tier for simple edits.
However, for high-volume multi-platform sellers, PixelMatch is better suited for the 8541-fix workflow because it allows you to batch-generate compliant, pure white background images for every variation in seconds. Instead of editing one photo at a time in Canva (which starts at $120/year for one person), you can upload your entire catalog and ensure every image meets the RGB 255, 255, 255 requirement instantly.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between Error 8541 and Error 8542?
Error 8541 occurs when your product ID matches a single existing ASIN but the attributes conflict. Error 8542 (Multiple Match Error) occurs when your product ID matches multiple ASINs in the catalog, requiring you to specify which one is correct or contact support to merge the listings.
Can I fix Error 8541 without changing my brand name?
Only if you can prove the existing catalog data is wrong. If you are not the brand owner, you must change your brand name to match the catalog. If you are the brand owner, you must ensure your Brand Registry details and the GS1 database are perfectly aligned before Amazon will allow an update.
How long does it take for an 8541 fix to reflect on the live site?
If you fix the error via “Manage Inventory” or a “PartialUpdate” flat file, changes typically propagate within 15 minutes to 6 hours. However, if you use the 24-hour delete and relist method, the full restoration of the listing can take up to 48 hours to fully index in search results.
Does Error 8541 affect my seller account health?
No, 8541 is a listing data conflict, not a policy violation. It will not result in an account suspension or a “strike” on your Account Health dashboard. It simply prevents the specific SKU from being purchasable until the data is reconciled.
Official Source Links

- Amazon Seller Central: Error 8541 Help Page
- Amazon Product Image Requirements
- GS1 US: Official GTIN Management for Amazon
- Amazon Brand Registry Support
Ready to scale your listings?
PixelMatch generates white-background, lifestyle, and variant mockups from a single source photo — built specifically for multi-platform ecommerce sellers. 50 free images on signup, no credit card.
Start free →
Sources
- Amazon Seller Central Reference G200692330: https://sellercentral.amazon.com/help/hub/reference/G200692330
- Amazon Product Image Requirements G1681: https://sellercentral.amazon.com/help/hub/reference/G1681
- GS1 GEPIR Search: https://gepir.gs1.org/index.php/search-by-gtin
- Photoroom Pricing: https://www.photoroom.com/pricing
- Adobe Express Pricing: https://www.adobe.com/express/pricing
- Canva Pricing: https://www.canva.com/pricing/
- Stripe Pricing: https://stripe.com/pricing
- Reddit r/AmazonSeller 8541 Discussion: https://www.reddit.com/r/AmazonSeller/comments/19e2q9q/error_code_8541_listing_an_item/